KAM
Well-Known Member
What is the legal position if I get tangled in a badly laid or marked lobster pot and my boat is damaged.
If you can prove negligence you could be awarded damages.
Would putting a well marked pot bang on the leading line qualify for negligence? This was the case going into the Holy Island anchorage last saturday. Why would anyone do such a thing?
Wanna buy some clear washing-up liquid containers for your day jobwhat is negligent about a 'well marked pot', perhaps it was a good catching spot. It all comes down to keeping a good lookout. Fishing pots and floats have been the tried and tested fishing method for shellfish and netting for fish for centuries, yachts with pointy keels and vulnerable rudders and exposed props are relatively recent on the scene in the scheme of things and also are not engaged (usually) in any kind of commercial activity just out for pleasure.
Touchpaper lit . . . . . now to retire to a safe distance
Wanna buy some clear washing-up liquid containers for your day job
Would putting a well marked pot bang on the leading line qualify for negligence?
'Why would anyone do such a thing?'
Or maybe it is where the lobsters are and he thinks that people can just go round his marker......Maybe he's a knob-head who doesnt care about anyone except himself,
or maybe
he has a chip on his shoulder and hates anyone with a yacht (compare with white-van-man's hatred of expensive cars)
Or maybe it is where the lobsters are and he thinks that people can just go round his marker...
A trawl on the internet shows that harbour authorities prohibit fishing and laying pots in fairways. I don't think they do that to spoil people's fun or to deprive them of a living.
Quote from an online dictionary: Fairway = the channel customarily navigated by vessels in (a harbour).
Didn't see mention of a harbour either...
So do anchorages have an anchorage authority then? (You are taking this all a bit seriously aren't you?) I think you will find the place described was neither a harbour (with a harbour authority) or at the end of a fairway (subject to harbour authority rules).Harbour = a place of refuge or safety
Why don't you buy a dictionary? It's way past my bedtime and I'm not going to sit here all night giving you definitions of words that you're quite capable of looking up for yourself.
In this country you would be fined for damaging the gear. The fisherman, presuming he is a professional pays annual fees which enables him to set this gear, he rents the spot if you like.
yachts with pointy keels and vulnerable rudders and exposed props are relatively recent on the scene in the scheme of things and also are not engaged (usually) in any kind of commercial activity just out for pleasure.
What's the big deal and why do so many of the sailors on this forum seem to think that they should have exclusive use of the waters around them?